I recently saw a blogger comment that her cleaning lady used vinegar to clean her floors, but it made her house smell like a pickle factory.

I use vinegar to clean my floors, surfaces, and windows, and I don’t have that problem. If you’re using vinegar and the smell remains after the surface dries, you’re using too much or doing something wrong.

To mop my floors, I use ¼ cup vinegar for 3 gallons of hot water. I also add about 10 drops of essential lemon oil.

To wash surfaces, I use about ¼ cup vinegar in a quart-sized spray bottle, then fill that with water.

To wash windows, I use equal parts vinegar and water and squeegie it off of the surface.

Vinegar is an amazing product. It’s made from fermented alcohol, and serves as powerful disinfectant and cleaner. According to Care2.com, a straight 5 percent solution of vinegar—the kind you can buy in the supermarket—kills 99 percent of bacteria, 82 percent of mold, and 80 percent of germs (viruses).

Using vinegar as a cleaner is awesome because it’s frugal. I’m not buying a ton of different product. I’m paying a fraction of the cost to achieve the exact same result that I could through some all purpose cleaner. If you look at the ingredients of Pine Sol or Mr. Clean, you’ll find that the active ingredient is alcohol — exactly from what vinegar is made.

More than that, though, I love using vinegar because it is safe. I don’t have to worry about it getting on the surface of my children’s skin. I don’t have to worry about it on the paws of my animals’ feet. I don’t have to worry about it getting into my ground water. It’s just vinegar – a product made from fermenting corn or apples, then diluted with water. There is nothing toxic about it.

And there is no lingering smell — chemical or pickle factory.

Hallee

I’m so grateful for your visit, today. You would bless me if you added me to your feed reader or subscribed via email.You can also become a fan on Facebook or follow me on Twitter. I would love to see more of you!

I use vinegar to clean almost everything in my house. I always thought the vinegar smell goes away as it dries?? That’s been my experience anyway–and sometimes I use straight-up vinegar (in the shower, for instance).

I’ll try to read up on this. I assume that vinegar’s water softening effect would be due to its acidity. (THis is why you can use it occasionally to get mineral deposits out of a coffee maker.) If you mix it with baking soda you will neutralize the pH (depending on the amount of baking soda you add) so it will not have that effect. You will also reduce its acidity by diluting it with enough water.

I tried to read up on using baking soda to neutralize odors. I was hoping to find better sources but all I found were google hits.
The ones I did find talked about baking soda neutralizing acidic odor substances (and some bases). Those neutralizing effects related to pH would not happen if baking soda were mixed with vinegar.
If you combine the right proportions of baking soda and vinegar, the hydrogen ions from the vinegar combine with the bicarbonate ions from the baking soda to make carbonic acid. The carbonic acid breaks down into water and carbon dioxide; the carbon dioxide leaves the solution as bubbles. What remains is a solution of sodium acetate at neutral pH, which as far as I know does not have any value for neutralizing odors.
Maybe in some cases there’s some benefit to using a frothy bubbly solution to help dislodge dirt by the bubbling action; I don’t know.
If you make a paste of baking soda with vinegar to use it for scrubbing, I’d think that you’d be using enough more baking soda than vinegar so that the baking soda would not all be dissolved. I’d expect that the vinegar would be neutralized and more baking soda from the paste would dissolve into the liquid so that the liquid making the paste would be alkaline even though you used vinegar to start with.
(In labs, people do use sodium acetate as a salt solution along with alcohol to precipitate DNA, but I don’t see this as relating to odor control.)

HOMEMAKER

Pronunciation:\ˈhōm-ˌmā-kər\Function: nounDate: 1876Definition: home·mak·er - a woman who manages a home as wife and mother while her husband earns the household income